Let's assume you've agreed your pass is forcing. Most people seem to play takeout doubles here, but my partner and I have 'invented' a system, though I'm sure we can't be the first to play it, where rather than the 2-way partition between takeout and penalties, we play a three-way partition. Thus pass either shows a hand that's hoping to penalty pass a takeout double from P, or a pure hand that has no intention of sitting for one. Meanwhile, double shows a middling sort of hand, canonically with three trumps to two honours, such that if the opps are in a 5-2 fit with trumps splitting 3-3, you may still want to penalise them.
Some examples:
You pass 2D, and pull his double (possibly to 3D, to ensure you find your right fit, since P will often have to double on off-shape hands to give you the chance to pass)
You pass and hope to pass his double.
You double, and hope that partner can pass on a layout such as:
People often refer to these as something like 'optional doubles', 'action doubles', or similar, but whenever I look up the meaning of such things it's always much vaguer - all of which seem to be vague variations on 'competitive' or 'values'. These - which, for want of better terminology and because it sounds cooler we call hunting doubles - are quite specific:
- You have to be in a forcing pass situation below a preagreed level
- You must have a realistic chance of catching them in a 7-card fit (eg opps can't have competitively bid and raised the suit - unless it could still be on a 7-card fit)
- You have to be acting directly after RHO has bid a suit as an offer of a place to play, in a situation where he rates to have most of his side's values in the suit
- Double wouldn't be pure penalties (eg you haven't bid and raised your own suit)
Broadly it changes 'pass-then-pull' from a statement about strength to a statement about shape/ODR.
You obviously need to have a clear agreement about when pass is forcing, and how high you play this (we play below 3N, but it rarely comes up above 2N). You also need to have a specific agreement about an auction like this:
Here responder has the suit but opener is disproportionately likely to have the honours, even if he only has a doubleton.
I suspect one of the reasons we've never encountered anyone else explicitly playing this this is it comes up most often when we double their weak NT, which doesn't happen much outside the UK. But there are various other situations where it can be nice:
- We double their strong NT for penalties
- They double our NT for penalties and we redouble naturally
- After 1a X XX (points and no fit), where the opps start scrambling
- When the opps directly overcall responder's 2/1 bid
Is anyone else familiar with it in this more specific form? Does it have a real name? Is there a good reason no-one else plays it?
For what it's worth, we've had good results. Beyond just finding penalties more often, it allows you to play more low-level passes as forcing, since you're less likely to accidentally double them into game or bid to a no-play part score.
Jinksy 'Suppose you have an all natural auction like this
Let's assume you've agreed your pass is forcing. Most people seem to play takeout doubles here, but my partner and I have 'invented' a system, though I'm sure we can't be the first to play it, where rather than the 2-way partition between takeout and penalties, we play a three-way partition. Thus pass either shows a hand that's hoping to penalty pass a takeout double from P, or a pure hand that has no intention of sitting for one. Meanwhile, double shows a middling sort of hand, canonically with three trumps to two honours, such that if the opps are in a 5-2 fit with trumps splitting 3-3, you may still want to penalise them.'